Minnesota does not preempt local scheduling laws, allowing cities like Minneapolis to enforce predictive scheduling and wage theft ordinances on top of state wage standards in chapter 177.
Minnesota has no statewide predictive scheduling law, but it has not preempted local fair workweek ordinances. Minneapolis enforces a Wage Theft Prevention Ordinance and pursued local scheduling protections, and Saint Paul has comparable enforcement structures. Statewide, Minn. Stat. 177.27 authorizes Department of Labor and Industry investigations of wage and hour violations. Employers operating in multiple Minnesota cities should track local notice requirements, predictability pay obligations, and recordkeeping rules in addition to state wage law.
Violations of local scheduling or wage notice ordinances may trigger administrative penalties, predictability pay, and back wages under combined state and local enforcement.
See how St. Michael's worker scheduling preemption rules stack up against other locations.
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